When communities face the impacts of mining, access to justice often remains out of reach. Legal processes can be expensive, complex and inaccessible to many of the people most affected by environmental degradation, land disputes and human rights violations.
To bridge this gap, the Building Resilient and Active Communities in Extractive Landscapes (BRACE) Project convened a strategic coordination meeting with legal experts, providing pro bono services and implementing partners, marking another important step towards expanding access to justice for mining-affected communities across Ghana.
The engagement brought together legal practitioners and project partners to strengthen collaboration, streamline referral systems and enhance the delivery of legal support services to vulnerable individuals and communities.
Discussions focused on how pro bono lawyers can work more closely with trained community paralegals to ensure that community grievances are effectively documented, referred and addressed through appropriate legal channels.
A key highlight of the meeting was the Legal Access Fund, an innovative BRACE intervention, established to help remove the financial barriers that often prevent affected persons from seeking legal redress.
Participants explored practical measures to ensure the fund serves as a lifeline for communities whose rights, livelihoods, lands and natural resources have been impacted by irresponsible mining activities.
The meeting also created space for these expert lawyers to share experiences from the field, discuss emerging legal and environmental challenges within mining communities and identify opportunities for collective action.
The discussions reinforced the importance of legal empowerment as a tool for promoting accountability and protecting the rights of vulnerable populations.
As Ghana continues to grapple with the environmental and social impacts of extractive activities, partnerships between civil society organisations, legal practitioners and communities are becoming increasingly important.
Through the BRACE Project funded by the European Union (EU), A Rocha Ghana and its partners are helping to build a support system where access to justice is not determined by financial capacity, but by the fundamental right of every citizen to seek redress and accountability.
The coordination meeting reaffirmed a shared vision among stakeholders: empowering communities with the knowledge, resources and legal support needed to defend their rights and contribute to a more responsible and sustainable extractive sector.
The BRACE is a three-year EU by A Rocha Ghana, Nature and Development Foundation and Wacam.
The project, which is being implemented in the Eastern, Ashanti, Western, Ahafo and Western North regions, aims to contribute to achieving sustainable and equitable environmental management and good natural resource governance by communities, government, and private extractive sector actors in Ghana.


